VietNamNet Bridge – While pushing his caddie around the streets of Vietnam for three months, Nicolas Queune took the time to observe its landscapes and its people.

Walkin’ blues: Nicolas Queune in a café in Hanoi in March. He arrived in Vietnam in March as part of his journey on foot around the world, which he began in 2013. — VNS Photos Vuong Bach Lien

Queune stands out in the crowd because he always wears a red T-shirt and a straw hat like his favourite comic character named Luffy, from the Japanese popular manga comic, One Piece. He started his journey on foot around the world in 2013.

An avid reader of the popular Japanese manga, which tells about the adventures of the aspiring king of the pirates Luffy, Nicolas decided to reproduce the journey of his hero to give meaning to his life.

Although the manga takes place in an imaginary world, the author is inspired by real places.

He started his trip five years ago in Asia. He first flew from France to Japan, and from there he walked around New Zealand, Australia, Malaysia, Thailand, Cambodia, and Laos.

His adventures will then take him from South East Asia to Europe, then probably to Central America.

He arrived in Vietnam in March and has been travelling around the country on foot until now. He is currently in the centre of the country.

Falling in love with Vietnam

Upon arriving in Vietnam, he began waking from Dien Bien Phu to Lao Cai, from Hanoi to Quang Ninh to see Ha Long Bay, and he’s now in Nha Trang.

“In Vietnam, life is not expensive. I can sleep in a guest house for just a few euros,” he says.

“In some other countries where life is more expensive, I mostly sleep in a tent, behind a tree, in abandoned houses, or at train stations.

“I am very happy to be in Vietnam because Vietnamese people are among the most welcoming people that I’ve met until now,” he says.

He hasn’t run into any danger on his journey so far, and he hopes this will continue to be the case.

“Here, it is very easy to meet people, they are curious; they invite me to drink tea with them on the sidewalk. I spend lot of evenings with local people. Some invite me to have dinner with them at home.

“Vietnamese cuisine is very tasty. I love it,” he says.

The language barrier has proven a challenge; most people try to speak to him in English, or use gestures. He has a smart phone where he can find translation of words and show them to local people.

His walking speed depends on the kinds of roads and on the climate.

In cities like Hanoi, he says that he can walk 40 kilometres par day, starting at 8am and finishing at 10pm.

Meaning

“Many of my friends thought I was joking when I told them about this idea. They didn’t believe that I could do it,” says Queune. But the 37-year-old French man is determined to make his dream come true.

Manga manga: Nicolas Queune has travelled around many regions of Vietnam, pushing his caddie, and wears a red T-shirt and a straw hat like his favourite comic character, called Luffy, from the Japanese manga, One Piece.

“I lived a boring life in France, I hope to do something meaningful with my life,” he says.

Before starting this journey, Nicolas Queune, living on the outskirts of Paris, kept working morose short-term contracts in IT, and went through life without a goal or project.

“I spent my days in front of the computer. I spent my spare time playing games. I’ve never had a girlfriend,” he says.

One day he found the website www.toutenmarchant.com which tells the story of two French men making a tour around the world by foot. He told himself that he may also do it.

And then, after ten days of preparation, he quit his job, took his savings, and started his trip.

He weighted 123 kilos at that time. After five years walking, he lost 50 kilos.

Nicolas has already travelled more than 8,000km on foot.

He tells about his trip in French on a Facebook page (Expedition One Piece Francais) and updates it regularly. He has an increasing number of fans.

Recently, his mother, 60, flew from France to join the walking tour with him in Thailand to fulfill her childhood dream.

“The trip has changed my life. I met so many interesting people,” she says.

“And by making this trip, I understand that everyone can do it! I opened to the world, me who spent all my time in front of my computer.”

He also wants to show that a major adventure like a world tour is not only for seasoned travellers or the elite: “I was obese; I had never hiked or even travelled alone. However, I did it and others can do it too.”